8 The respective cases as summarised by the Crown were:
"The victim RA was sexually assaulted on four occasions by the Appellant, who lived nearby in the Padstow Heights area and was the elder brother of one of the victim's school friends. The sexual assaults took place between 1983 and 1987 when the victim was between about 12 and 16 years of age. The Appellant was about six years older than him. The assaults occurred in both the victim's home and the Appellant's home when no one else was there. The allegations of assaults fell into four separate incidents and were summarised by agreement in MFI 2:
Incident 1 - in the Appellant's bedroom in 1983 when the victim was about 12. These were Counts 1 to 4 and consisted of: fellatio of the victim by the Appellant; buggery of the victim by the Appellant; or attempted buggery (Count 3 was in the alternative to Count 2); and fellatio of the Appellant by the victim. The Appellant was found guilty of Counts 1, 2 and 4.
Incident 2 - in the Appellant's bedroom in 1985. This was a different room in the house by that stage. The victim was about 14. The incident was referred to as the `magazine incident' because the Appellant showed the victim a homosexual pornographic magazine to at the start of the incident. The counts were Counts 5 to 7 and involved the Appellant masturbating the victim's penis; getting the victim to fellate him; and performing fellatio on the victim. The Appellant was found guilty of each count.
Incident 3 - It was Count 8 and the Appellant was found not guilty. It was referred to as the 'swimming pool incident' because the Appellant was alleged to have come over to the victim's house to have a swim. The allegation was that the Appellant inserted his finger or fingers in the victim's anus in the victim's bedroom sometime between 1 January 1985 and 31 December 1986 when the victim would have been between 13 and 15.
Incident 4 - in the kitchen of victim's house in 1987 when the victim was about 16. This was Count 9 and the Appellant was found guilty. It was referred to as the 'dishwasher incident' because involved the Appellant suddenly entering the kitchen unbeknownst to the victim and grabbing him in the crotch area whilst the victim was holding some plates that he had just taken out of the dishwasher. The victim threw the plates to the floor and the Appellant left the house.
The victim's evidence
The victim RA gave evidence that he was aged 33 at the time of the trial in 2005 and was born on 14 September 1971. He grew up in Padstow Heights in a house at Villiers Road with his parents (who separated when he was about 10 years old, the father leaving the family) and his two older brothers (T 17.2.05, 1-2). The house had a swimming pool in the back and his mother worked full-time as a social worker.
The victim attended Padstow Heights Primary School and Picnic Point High School and became close friends with a girl at school, DP, who was the younger sister of the Appellant. The Pavitt family lived about three houses away around the corner in Roma Avenue and the victim could see their house from parts of their property. DP was about one month younger than the victim. DP had an older sister, WP, whom the victim believed was four years older than her. He believed that the Appellant was several years older again than WP. The Appellant seemed to the victim to be about nine or ten years older than him (T 17.2.05, 3-5) and was described as being more physically mature than him.
Incident 1, Counts 1-4: One week day afternoon in 1983 when the victim was in Year 6 and about 12 years of age, he visited the Pavitt's home in Roma Avenue to see DP. The Appellant opened the door and asked him to come inside. The Appellant told him that DP was visiting another friend further up Roma Avenue, but she would be home soon. The victim and the Appellant watched TV in the lounge room for about half an hour. The Appellant went to the toilet and called out for the victim to get him some toilet paper from the laundry. As the victim was about to hand the toilet paper around the louvre door to the Appellant, he was surprised when the Appellant pushed the door open with his foot and the victim could see his penis hanging down and his pubic hair as he sat on the toilet. He went back to the lounge room and the Appellant later came back to the lounge room.
There was a conversation about aeroplanes and the Appellant invited the victim to look at his model aeroplanes in his bedroom. Once they were in the bedroom, the victim noticed the Appellant had dolls or figurines of Kiss, a rock group band, on a shelf behind his bed, and a number of model airplanes including 747s (T 17.2.05, 5-11). The Appellant asked him, 'Do you want to play a game?' The Appellant took his pants off and undressed the victim. The victim was very shocked. The victim did not have any pubic hair at this time. The Appellant went down over him and started sucking his penis (Count 1). The victim was sitting on the Appellant's single bed and the Appellant was crouching down, kneeling down with his mouth over the victim's penis. This happened for a few minutes and the victim felt very scared as he didn't understand what was happening (T 17.2.05, 11-14). The Appellant rubbed and felt the victim's anus and anally penetrated him with his fingers which felt very uncomfortable. The Appellant told him to stand up and the Appellant then sat on the bed. The victim saw the Appellant's erect penis and thought it was huge. The Appellant sort of grabbed the victim's body, the victim had his back to the Appellant and pulled him back down onto his penis. The Appellant kept rubbing the victim's anus, with some sort of watery or oily lubricant. Then the victim felt him actually push it inside his rectum and he remembered excruciating pain down his legs and through his body. He felt extremely scared and believed that he was crying at the time. The Appellant pushed harder and harder with his penis (Counts 2 and 3; T 17.2.05, p 14-15). After this finished, the Appellant got the victim to suck on his penis (Count 4). He remembered the Appellant masturbating and then forcing his penis into the victim's mouth when the victim was crouching or may have been sitting on the bed. He remembered the Appellant pulling the victim's head onto his penis and then some sort of fluid in his mouth and on his face (Count 4, T 17.2.05, 17-18).
After they got dressed, the victim wanted to leave and he was crying, but the Appellant held him and made him promise repeatedly that he wouldn't tell anyone. The Appellant said surely the victim did this with his brothers at home. The Appellant said he had a problem with girls. The victim asked if he could use the toilet and once he was out of the room, he ran out the back door and up the side of the house through a side gate and ran home. He did not tell anyone what had happened because he was too scared of the Appellant (T 17.2.06, 18-20).
Incident 2, Counts 5-7: In 1985, when the victim was in Year 8 and was about 14 years old, he recalled a warm day when he was wearing shorts and he went to visit DP at the Pavitt's house. Her older sister WP opened the door and welcomed him inside. He did not know where the Appellant was at this time. He found out after a short time that DP was not home and he recalled WP walking out the front door.
He recalled the Appellant appearing and 'grabbing' and 'dragging' him into his bedroom, which had changed from the room in Incident 1. The Appellant told him that he had something he wanted to show him and he produced from the wardrobe a brown paper bag, which contained a homosexual pornographic magazine. The magazine showed men having oral and anal intercourse. The Appellant said, 'Look at the size of their penises, look how big they are'. The Appellant took off his clothes and pulled down the victim's pants. He fondled the victim's penis (Count 5) and put the victim's hand on his (the Appellant's) penis. The victim said he was scared and he didn't like it and didn't want to do this. The Appellant replied words to the effect of, 'Don't be worried, it's not like as if we're boyfriends'. The fondling continued for about five to ten minutes. The victim had some pubic hair at this stage (T 17.2.05, 22-3). The Appellant sucked the victim's penis and the victim got an erection. The Appellant asked whether the victim wanted to 'fuck his arse' and victim replied, 'No'. The Appellant stood up, the victim was seated at the time, and the Appellant pushed his penis into the victim's face and made the victim give him oral sex. The Appellant had his hands around the victim's head and pulled him down onto his penis. The Appellant's penis was in the victim's mouth for about a minute (Count 6; T 17.2.05, 23-5). The Appellant then went back down on the victim while the victim was on the bed. The Appellant was sucking the victim's penis (Count 7; T 17.2.05, 26) and the victim ejaculated. This was the first time the victim had ejaculated.
The Appellant 'got really really angry' because the victim had ejaculated into his mouth. The Appellant opened the door - he did not get dressed first - went out for a time and came back with a bottle of Dettol in his hand. The Appellant said the taste from the victim ejaculating was disgusting. The Appellant opened the bottle of Dettol, took a swig of it and gargled it in front of him, then left the room again. The victim started getting dressed. When the Appellant came back he was still upset and said something like 'why didn't you tell me you were going to do that' and the victim said he didn't know that he was going to do that. The victim then left the house by the front door. The Appellant was still very angry. The victim went up into the National Park that runs along the Georges River and hid in the bushes until it got dark and then went home. He felt grubby, scared, anxious and bewildered and didn't tell anyone what had happened (T 17.2.05, 26-8).
The victim did not have any other contact with the Appellant for a time after this incident and the next occasion the victim recalled was when the Appellant came over for the 21st birthday part of the victim's older brother, MA, when the victim was 15 years old. The victim also gave evidence that he never swam in their swimming pool with the Appellant (T 17.2.05, 30).
Incident 3, Count 8 (the Appellant was found not guilty): One weekday sometime during 1985 or 1986 when the victim would have been between 13 and 15, the victim heard knocking on the front door. He opened the door and the Appellant walked straight in and said he had come over for a swim. The Appellant was wearing business clothes. The Appellant walked into the victim's bedroom, took off rings and other things he was wearing and put them on a dresser. The victim was watching him from the entrance to his bedroom. The victim said he 'wasn't big enough to sort of like kick him out' and said that the Appellant was 'known to me at the time as the devil' (T 17.2.05, 30). 2 The Appellant finished undressing and then undressed the victim. The Appellant groped at the victim's body and started biting the victim's nipples, which really hurt and the victim told him that it hurt. The Appellant stopped biting him and began fondling his penis and anus and stuck a finger into his anus (Count 8). The victim then said that the Appellant stuck his penis into between the victim's legs and pushed and withdrew it between his legs 'standing up in the family bathroom and then I remember him masturbating really hard and fast and I remember he came,' meaning the Appellant ejaculated, on the victim and on himself. The Appellant had brought a towel and went back into the victim's bedroom to get the towel. He wiped himself and the victim off and swam in the family's swimming pool (T 17.2.05, 32-33).
The Pavitts then moved about half a kilometre away in Padstow Heights but the victim still had contact with DP.
Incident 4, Count 9: In 1987, at the end of Year 10 when the victim was 16, he was in the kitchen at home unloading dishes from the dishwashing machine for his mother before she got home from work. He thought that he heard a noise at the front door and looked quickly at the door. He was the only person at home at the time. He then took out perhaps four plates at once to put them away in the cupboard. Suddenly a figure came at him and stuck out his arm, grabbing him on the testicles. The victim saw that it was the Appellant. The victim 'threw the plates on the floor and yelled and started bawling my eyes out' and fell to the floor. He heard the Appellant running out of the house. The plates had smashed all over the tiled floor and he had a piece which he started digging into his wrist. He had been expecting two female friends to come over and he heard another knock at the door and it was them. One of the girls consoled him, asking what was wrong. He did not tell her, though, because he did not want to be called a 'homo' or 'poofter' at school because of what the Appellant had been doing (T 17.2.05, 36-8).
Further to the reference to 'the devil', in re-examination the victim gave evidence at T 2.3.05 at page 13.
Uncharged conduct : On another occasion after the Pavitts had moved house, he remembered an incident that occurred but his memory was not as clear. It occurred in the Appellant's mother's bedroom. The Appellant got some of his mother's moisturiser, which was some sort of pink, floral-smelling moisturiser and rubbed it on the victim's body but it stung (T 17.2.05, 43).
The victim gave evidence that he complained about the Appellant to his school friend MP, childhood friends SD and HR, HR's mother Ellen Joy, his mother, his ex fiancé Kylie Saare and a sexual assault counsellor at Bankstown (T 18.2.05, 2). He spoke with SD on many occasions about the Appellant sexually assaulting and 'raping' him (T 18.2.05, 3). He told HR over the telephone that he was scared of the Appellant (T 18.2.05, 4). He told Ellen Joy at her property at Leppington that the Appellant was touching him and doing other things to him and that he was very scared of the Appellant (T 18.2.05, 5). He first spoke to his mother about it when he was in Year 11 and he was 18 years old. She referred him to a counselling service (T 18.2.05, 5-6). He first told Ms Saare when they were both 21 years old in 1994 (T 18.2.05, 5).
He had a telephone conversation with the Appellant when he was in Year 11 and asked the Appellant if he was gay and if this was the reason that the Appellant had done these things to him. The Appellant had replied that he was not gay and not to worry about it (T 18.2.05, 6-8). After he finished school, the victim was working for NSW TAFE at the corner of Hay and Castlereagh Street, Sydney, and had seen the Appellant at the main entry to Central Station at Eddy Avenue on the way to work. The Appellant approached him and asked how he was going, but the victim did not say anything, shrugged and kept on walking because, 'I didn't want to know him' (T 18.2.05, 8-9).
He had a further telephone conversation with the Appellant when the Appellant was living in England. He rang the Appellant and asked him if he remembered what he used to do to the victim when the victim was a kid and the Appellant responded, 'Yes'. The victim told him he had had a lot of problems as a result of what happened, but the Appellant did not really have much to say (T 18.2.05, 9-10). The victim told him about the nervous breakdown he had had while working as a sales executive for a security company and his fears about his relationship with his fiancé and told the Appellant he wanted to get more professional help. He asked the Appellant to pay for it and the Appellant said that he might be able to help him (T 18.2.05, 12-13).
After the victim first contacted the police in 2002, arrangements were made on 3 March 2003 for the victim to telephone the Appellant (who had returned to Australia) and for a tape recording to be made of the conversation (T 18.2.05, 14-15). The tape of the telephone call was admitted as Exhibit F and a transcript of the call was admitted as an aide memoir. At page 5 of the transcript, the victim says, '... I want to speak to you about, like, you know, what you did to me when I was younger, because it, it's, it's going to be part of, like, the healing process for me', and the Appellant responds, 'Yeah. Sure, sure. Well, do you want me to come out and see you?' Then at pages 6-7:
V2 [victim]: ... Like, you know what you did to me --
VI [Appellant]: Mmm.
V 1: --- like, you know, when I was younger and that, it sort of made me question my sexuality.
V l: Yeah.
V2: And I had a, like, you know, that's another problem for me. I don't know what I am any more.
V l: Yeah. Yeah.
V2: And, like, you know, I, I don't know, why did you do it to me when I was a kid, Steven?
V1: Well, know you, I, like I said to you, you know, the same thing happened with me and [male first name], you know, we, [he] approached me, and we just mucked around a little bit. I thought well, this is cool, and --
Then at page 9:
V2: Do you feel guilty about what you did to me?
V l: Yes - you --
At page 10:
V2 You, you, but you can help me by telling me why you did it.
V l: It was just a little muck around thing --
V2: What - but what, what was I, just a fuckin' toy?
Vi: No.
V2: Well, why did you do it to me?
V l: I don't --
V2: It wasn't, if … I'd never, I was 10 years old, and you did it to me until I was, like, 15. I, I didn't even have a choice. And now I don't even know what I am.
V l: [Victim's first name], I just don't have any answers for you, mate.
In the Appellant's ERISP conducted later on 3 March 2003 (the edited tape is Exhibit G and the transcript is Exhibit H), the Appellant denied any sexual behaviour towards the victim whatsoever. The interviewing officer referred to the telephone call with the victim earlier that day. The Appellant denied any wrongdoing and said at Q 149 in relation to 'mucking around':
What it was along the lines of, just mucking around, that's what all of, you know, he and the brothers, we, when we went swimming sometimes it was just in the nude. You know, it was nothing else more than that, we were just mucking around. So I never did touch him like that.
Cross-examination of the victim
In cross-examination, the victim RA said he had seen about a dozen mental health care professionals over the years from 1999, some of whom prescribed various drugs for him (T 24.2.05, 5-22). He had heard threatening voices, thought clones were going to kill and replace him and his fiancé and he burnt things in their apartment (T 24.2.05, 27-32). He maintained that the Appellant was a demon (T 24.2.05, 32). Apart from a short time working as a horse trail rider, he had not had any paid employment since 1999 (T 24.2.05, 42). In one of his police statements, he said that he believed at the start of the alleged incidents that the Appellant drove a red Toyota Celica and he conceded in cross-examination that he must be wrong about this (T 24.2.05, 70-2). The first vehicle he associated with the Appellant was the red Toyota Celica (T 25.2.05, 17). The victim admitted that he developed a drug problem from the age of 29 or 30 (T 25.2.05, 30), including heroin and cocaine (T 1.3.05, 6) for a period of about six months or less (T 1.3.05, 10). He ended up spending something like $400 a day on illicit drugs (T 1.3.05, 11) and committed several crimes, such as stealing and robbery, resulting in him being sentenced to imprisonment (T 1.3.05, 63-75).
The victim gave conflicting evidence in the current trial and the earlier trial as to whether he was sitting upright on the bed or lying down in the first incident (T 25.2.06, 46-7).
It was put to the victim that the alleged sexual assaults never occurred (T 25.2.06, 48). It was pointed out that, despite him supposedly being in fear of the Appellant, he went back on occasions to the Pavitts' house to see DP (T 25.2.06, 61; T 28.2.06, 2).
In relation to Count 8, the victim said that the Appellant walked naked from his room into the bathroom (at the victim's house) to get moisturiser while the victim waited alone in the room for a minute, although supposedly he was afraid of the Appellant (T 28.2.05, 11-12).
In relation to the uncharged incident at the Appellant's house involving the floral smelling moisturiser, the victim conceded he could not 'really remember' about the incident and 'it's vague to me for some reason' (T 28.2.05, 51-3). He agreed he was 'very vague' about it (T 28.2.05, 55).
During the 1999 telephone call to the UK, the victim agreed that he 'may have said something to him [the Appellant] about I could go to the police about the matter' if the Appellant did not put money in his account (T 1.3.05, 30). The Appellant's version of their conversation on the telephone was put to the victim (T 1.3.05, 29-35).
The victim admitted that he looked at and read the notes being written out by the Officer in Charge during the recorded 2003 telephone conversation, such as, 'Why did you do it to me?' (T 1.3.05, 48). It was put to him that his brother MA, the Appellant and others skinny-dipped in their pool (T 1.3.05, 58).
Other evidence
The victim's older brother MA gave evidence that he did not know the Appellant very well at all when he was growing up and he did not recall the Appellant ever swimming with him. He did not recall skinny-dipping in the family pool with his male friends (T 3.3.05, 26).
The Officer in Charge, Detective Woodbridge, gave evidence of the taped telephone call with the Appellant, the Appellant's arrest and ERISP interview and also of obtaining RTA records regarding the Appellant's ownership of motor vehicles. The relevance of this evidence was that the victim was mistaken initially as to the colour of the vehicle that the Appellant drove at about the time of the first incident (he thought it was a red vehicle). The Appellant was registered as the owner of a green 1976 Toyota sedan acquired on 22 August 1983 until 12 December 1986 and it was then that he acquired a red 1982 Toyota sedan on 12 December 1986 which he disposed of on 8 November 1989 (Exhibit K). WP's birth certificate showed she was born in 1967 and a child Steven was recorded as being two years old at that time (Exhibit L; T 4.3.05, 15-16). (This made the Appellant approximately six years older than the victim, who was born in 1971.)
As will be referred to below, the victim committed various crimes around 2001 and was imprisoned. Psychiatrist Dr Bruce Westmore gave evidence that he attended on the victim when the victim was in Long Bay Correctional Centre in September 2001, for the purpose of preparing a report for the victim's sentencing proceedings (see below for further details of the victim's offending). Dr Westmore took a history from the victim including a note that 'a number of incidents occurred where inappropriate sexual activity was directed towards him between the ages of 11 and 13 by an older male neighbour; no complaints were made' (T 4.3.05, 41). Dr Westmore gave expert evidence regarding a person's belief of an event occurring in the past, before the onset of a psychosis. He said, 'If the belief appeared to be reasonable and something that might have occurred, then that would suggest to me that that belief was not arising from their psychosis' (T 4.3.05, 47). Further, if the person had reported his beliefs to others before the onset of a psychotic episode and that episode had resolved, 'It would suggest that the statements are not related or unlikely to be related to the psychotic episode' (T 4.3.05, 56).
There was evidence of complaint from a number of witnesses to whom the complainant reported the sexual conduct of the appellant before the onset of his psychosis.
2. The Appellant's Evidence
The Appellant denied that anything of a sexual nature took place between himself and the victim at any time (T 7.3.05, 25, 29-30, 32, 41, 66). He also relied on his good character (T 7.3.05, 45). The Officer in Charge confirmed during her cross-examination that the Appellant had no convictions in Australia or overseas (T 4.3.05, 35).
The Appellant gave evidence that he was threatened by the victim to put $3000 in his bank account or he would accuse him of sexual assault (T 7.3.05, 60).
The Appellant gave evidence that he was born on 2 December 1964. In 1983 was living in the family house at Roma Avenue, Padstow Heights. He finished school in 1982 and worked for the Associated Newsagents' Coop and for McDonalds in 1983 as well as commencing study with TAFE in a Customs Import and Export course in 1984 (T 7.3.05, 19-20). He began a full-time job with a freight forwarding company, IndoAtlantic, in June 1983, in which he worked 9 am to after 5 pm during the week with about half an hour's travelling time (T 7.3.05, 24). He drove a blue Ford Escort in 1983 and changed to a green Toyota Celica on 22 August 1983 (T 7.3.05, 21). He knew the victim's family, who lived nearby in Villiers Road. He and the neighbourhood kids used to swim in the victim's family pool. This happened when it was particularly hot, and didn't happen that often (T 7.3.05, 22). The Appellant began another full-time job in freight forwarding in December 1984 (T 7.3.05, 25).
The victim came over to their house from time to time to visit his younger sister, DP (T 7.3.05, 27). He did not have a recollection of visiting the victim's house apart from going for a swim (T 7.3.05, 27).
He moved bedrooms in his house in February 1986 after catching glandular fever (T 7.3.05, 29). The bedroom marked by the victim in his evidence was not the Appellant's room at the time and was occupied by his other sister, WP (T 7.3.05, 30).
His mother cleaned the house, including putting the children's clothes away in wardrobes, and the house was very clean. He never had any pornographic homosexual magazines (T 7.3.05, 30).
He took up employment with another freight company in 1985, Flyway International, at Botany and this did not involve him going out to see clients or customers (T 7.3.05, 32). Similarly, his next job with Brambles International Freight was all office work and did not involve seeing clients (T 7.3.05, 33). He attended TAFE in the evenings three days a week (T 7.3.05, 33). The TAFE course continued in 1986 (T 7.3.05, 37).
He changed cars again on 12 December 1986 to the red 1982 Toyota Celica (T 7.3.05, 34-5).
He denied swimming in the victim's pool in 1985 or 1986, because he had a girlfriend at that time and he went to the beach with her. He would not have swum in the victim's pool (T 7.3.05, 37-8).
MA was wrong when he denied that he and the Appellant were mates when they were growing up (T 7.3.05, 38). He and the neighbourhood kids, including MA, 'did some skinny dipping when we were younger'. This was when the Appellant was only about 13 years old, years before the allegations (T 7.3.05, 38).
He moved with his family to their new property nearby in Bernard Road after the Roma Avenue house was sold in September 1988 (T 7.3.05, 42). In his next job with Unit Load he had a company vehicle but he never visited the victim's house (T 7.3.05, 42). He relocated to Melbourne with work in March 1990 (T 7.3.05, 43). He worked in Melbourne in different jobs until 1997 when he moved to the UK with Qantas (T 7.3.05, 44) and he did not maintain any contact with the victim's family during that time (T 7.3.05, 45). He remained working in the UK until July 2000.
Whilst he was in the UK, he received two telephone calls from a person identifying himself as the victim. The first call was on 23 September 1999 and the second on 27 September 1999. He was able to state the dates because he had found one of his diaries (T 7.3.05, 57). He was under a lot of pressure during the ERISP when he said that he had not received any calls from the victim and he also noted that he said in ERISP that the Olympics were in 2002 instead of 2000 (T 7.3.05, 58). During one of these calls in the UK, he wrote down on a piece of paper the drugs that the victim told him he was taking: heroin, Epilim, Mogodon and Zonax. He later put this piece of paper in his diary. He noted down during the call that the victim asked him for $3000 and made a note of the Commonwealth Bank, but not an identifying bank number (T 7.3.05, 58-9).
The victim told him that he was in a bad situation with drugs (T 7.3.05, 59). The victim said, 'Put $3000 in my account otherwise I'll accuse you of sexual assault' (T 7.3.05, 60). The Appellant replied, 'That's false allegations [first name of victim]. I cannot assist you and don't bother to call me again' (T 7.3.05, 60). In the second call, the victim said, '[Y]ou haven't paid the money into my account yet,' and the Appellant replied, '[T]here is nothing to pay into your account, there is nothing I can do for you, I did not do these things, please don't call me again' and hung up (T 7.3.05, 61). The victim was 'very threatening' on the telephone (T 7.3.05, 61).
The Appellant's next contact with the victim was the recorded telephone call on 3 March 2003. The Appellant had returned to Sydney to care for his ailing father in 2000 (T 7.3.05, 61-2). During the 2003 telephone call the Appellant thought the victim was hysterical and thought he had problems because he said he was psychotic (T 7.3.05, 64). The Appellant's reference in the call, and in the ERISP, to 'mucking around' was to 'skinny dipping in the pool when we were younger' (T 7.3.05, 64). He was never told during the ERISP by the police that the call earlier that day had been recorded; he just thought that the police had been listening in to the call from the questions he was asked (T 7.3.05, 65).
The Appellant stressed in his ERISP that he had never sexually assaulted the victim and that the victim had seemed upset during the recorded telephone conversation earlier that day.
Cross-examination of the Appellant
The Appellant gave evidence and was cross-examined on when he first looked at a diary he said he kept in the UK in 1999, regarding the notes he made of the drugs that the victim told him he was using in one of the calls to the UK in 1999. The Appellant said he could not recall whether the notes he made were in the diary itself or on a piece of paper in the diary (T 7.3.05, 70-3). The diary was produced as Exhibit 9. The Appellant was then cross-examined about when he put the notes in the diary.
He was cross-examined about his response during the recorded telephone conversation in March 2003 when the victim told him he was a heroin addict. The Appellant replied with apparent surprise, 'Okay, shit' to hearing that the victim was a heroin addict. This was inconsistent, on the Crown case, with the Appellant's earlier conversation in 1999 when supposedly the victim told him he was in a 'bad situation' using heroin (T 7.3.05, 77). It should not have been a surprise in 2003 to hear that the victim used heroin if in fact (as the Appellant said had occurred) the victim told him that in the earlier telephone conversation in 1999. Similarly, the Appellant's greeting and pleasantries at the start of the 2003 conversation was inconsistent with his version of the attempted extortion by the victim on the telephone in 1999 and the Appellant supposedly hanging up the phone on the victim in the second telephone call in 1999 (T 7.3.05, 77-8). With respect to the Appellant's explanation of the 'little muck around thing', the Appellant added in cross-examination, 'It was flashing and then skinny dipping in the pool. There was no sexual contact at all' (T 7.3.05, 85).
The Appellant agreed in cross-examination that he had spent time living in each of the three children's bedrooms in his family's house (T 8.3.05, 10).
Other evidence in appellant's case
The Appellant's mother Anne Pavitt gave evidence that she had never seen any homosexual pornographic material in the Appellant's room or anywhere else in the house when he was growing up (T 8.3.05, 51). The victim had telephoned her in 1999 and asked her for the Appellant's contact number overseas (T 8.3.05, 53).
The Appellant's sister Donna McGuire gave evidence that she saw the victim about once or twice a week outside school hours when they were at school together (T 8.3.05, 69). He had never said anything to her about her brother (T 8.3.05, 72). She rang the victim in 1999 after her mother mentioned the victim's call to her, and the victim also asked her for the Appellant's number but she was on the mobile in the car and didn't have it with her (T 8.3.05, 78)."
Ground 1: that the trial judge erred in admitting into evidence exhibit F, the tape recording of the telephone conversation between the appellant and the complainant.
9 The appellant complains that the trial judge ought not to have admitted exhibit F as the parts of the taped telephone call upon which the Crown most strongly relied were passages which appeared to have been prompted by the police.